Nettsider med emneord «EU Law»
In this article, the author Doctoral Research Fellow Julius Rumpf explores the needs for and legal boundaries to the delegation of rule-making, particularly in light of the European Court of Justice's (ECJ's) non-delegation doctrine, or Meroni doctrine.
Webinar held by Dr. Romain Mauger, Head of the Legal Research Unit at the Iberian Centre for Research in Energy Storage (CIIAE), located in Cáceres, Spain.
Webinar held by Antoine Lochet and Anna Björg Guðjónsdóttir, both from BBA//Fjeldco.
The programme includes 4 presentations covering specific legal consequences of the war in Ukraine at different levels of the legal systems: international, EU and national.
The meeting is open, but we would appreciate if you would register your attendance. Please note: This will be a physical meeting only.
In pursuit of more efficient energy prices, increased security of supply and more sustainable power production, the EU has endeavoured for decades to create a pan-European market for the free trade of electricity across borders. However, connections between the national energy markets are still insufficient to make this vision of an ‘Energy Union’ a reality.
In his Ph.D. thesis, Julius Rumpf examines how EU law regulates high-voltage electricity infrastructure, particularly cross-border transmission lines (so-called interconnectors), to create a single market for electricity that spans the entire continent and helps achieve the aims of EU energy policy.
The project aims at establishing and developing joint educational activities and student mobility within European law, Human Rights and International Law between the Law faculties of the Universities of Oslo (Norway) and National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Ukraine).
Siri Kildahl Venemyr's Phd project focus on what role EU/EEA law plays, and how it influences this part of national administrative law.
The European Court of Justice has recognized that access to court is an essential element of a Union based on the Rule of Law. Whether the litigant has standing to make a legal claim in court – locus standi – is critical as to whether he may enforce the law and obtain a remedy. Hilde K. Ellingsen's Ph.D project contains an analysis of how Union law impacts on domestic standing rules.